DNSEXT Working Group E. Lewis
INTERNET DRAFT NeuStar
Expiration Date: November 16, 2005 May 16, 2005
The Role of Wildcards
in the Domain Name System
draft-ietf-dnsext-wcard-clarify-07.txt
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
Abstract
This is an update to the wildcard definition of RFC 1034. The
interaction with wildcards and CNAME is changed, an error
condition removed, and the words defining some concepts central
to wildcards are changed. The overall goal is not to change
wildcards, but to refine the definition of RFC 1034.
1 Introduction
In RFC 1034 [RFC1034], sections 4.3.2 and 4.3.3 describe the
synthesis of answers from special resource records called
wildcards. The definition in RFC 1034 is incomplete and has
proven to be confusing. This document describes the wildcard
synthesis by adding to the discussion and making limited
modifications. Modifications are made to close inconsistencies
that have led to interoperability issues. This description
does not expand the service intended by the original definition.
Staying within the spirit and style of the original documents,
this document avoids specifying rules for DNS implementations
regarding wildcards. The intention is to only describe what is
needed for interoperability, not restrict implementation choices.
In addition, consideration has been given to minimize any
backwards compatibility with implementations that have complied
with RFC 1034's definition.
This document is focused on the concept of wildcards as defined
in RFC 1034. Nothing is implied regarding alternative approaches,
nor are alternatives discussed.
1.1 Motivation
Many DNS implementations have diverged with respect to wildcards
in different ways from the original definition, or at from least
what had been intended. Although there is clearly a need to
clarify the original documents in light of this alone, the impetus
for this document lay in the engineering of the DNS security
extensions [RFC4033]. With an unclear definition of wildcards
the design of authenticated denial became entangled.
This document is intended to limit changes, only those based on
implementation experience, and to remain as close to the original
document as possible. To reinforce this, relevant sections of RFC
1034 are repeated verbatim to help compare the old and new text.
1.2 The Original Definition
The context of the wildcard concept involves the algorithm by
which a name server prepares a response (in RFC 1034's section
4.3.2) and the way in which a resource record (set) is identified
as being a source of synthetic data (section 4.3.3).
The beginning of the discussion ought to start with the definition
of the term "wildcard" as it appears in RFC 1034, section 4.3.3.
# In the previous algorithm, special treatment was given to RRs with
# owner names starting with the label "*". Such RRs are called
# wildcards. Wildcard RRs can be thought of as instructions for
# synthesizing RRs. When the appropriate conditions are met, the name
# server creates RRs with an owner name equal to the query name and
# contents taken from the wildcard RRs.
This passage appears after the algorithm in which the term wildcard
is first used. In this definition, wildcard refers to resource
records. In other usage, wildcard has referred to domain names,
and it has been used to describe the operational practice of
relying on wildcards to generate answers. It is clear from this
that there is a need to define clear and unambiguous terminology
in the process of discussing wildcards.
The mention of the use of wildcards in the preparation of a
response is contained in step 3c of RFC 1034's section 4.3.2
entitled "Algorithm." Note that "wildcard" does not appear in
the algorithm, instead references are made to the "*" label.
The portion of the algorithm relating to wildcards is
deconstructed in detail in section 3 of this document, this is
the beginning of the passage.
# c. If at some label, a match is impossible (i.e., the
# corresponding label does not exist), look to see if [...]
# the "*" label exists.
The scope of this document is the RFC 1034 definition of
wildcards and the implications of updates to those documents,
such as DNSSEC. Alternate schemes for synthesizing answers are
not considered. (Note that there is no reference listed. No
document is known to describe any alternate schemes, although
there has been some mention of them in mailing lists.)
1.3 This Document
This document accomplishes these three items.
o Defines new terms
o Makes minor changes to avoid conflicting concepts
o Describes the actions of certain resource records as wildcards
1.3.1 New Terms
To help in discussing what resource records are wildcards, two
terms will be defined - "asterisk label" and "wild card domain
name". These are defined in section 2.1.1.
To assist in clarifying the role of wildcards in the name server
algorithm in RFC 1034, 4.3.2, "source of synthesis" and "closest
encloser" are defined. These definitions are in section 3.3.2.
"Label match" is defined in section 3.2.
The introduction of new terms ought not have an impact on any
existing implementations. The new terms are used only to make
discussions of wildcards clearer.
1.3.2 Changed Text
The definition of "existence" is changed, superficially. This
change will not be apparent to implementations; it is needed to
make descriptions more precise. The change appears in section
2.2.3.
RFC 1034, section 4.3.3., seems to prohibit having two asterisk
labels in a wildcard owner name. With this document the
restriction is removed entirely. This change and its implications
are in section 2.1.3.
The actions when a source of synthesis owns a CNAME RR are
changed to mirror the actions if an exact match name owns a
CNAME RR. This is an addition to the words in RFC 1034,
section 4.3.2, step 3, part c. The discussion of this is in
section 3.3.3.
Only the latter change represents an impact to implementations.
The definition of existence is not a protocol impact. The change
to the restriction on names is unlikely to have an impact, as
there was no discussion of how to enforce the restriction.
1.3.3 Considerations with Special Types
This document describes semantics of wildcard CNAME RRSets
[RFC2181], wildcard NS RRSets, wildcard SOA RRSets, wildcard
DNAME RRSets [RFC2672], wildcard DS RRSets [RFC TBD], and empty
non-terminal wildcards. Understanding these types in the context
of wildcards has been clouded because these types incur special
processing if they are the result of an exact match. This
discussion is in section 4.
These discussions do not have an implementation impact, they cover
existing knowledge of the types, but to a greater level of detail.
1.4 Standards Terminology
This document does not use terms as defined in "Key words for use
in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels." [RFC2119]
Quotations of RFC 1034 are denoted by a '#' in the leftmost
column.
2 Wildcard Syntax
The syntax of a wildcard is the same as any other DNS resource
record, across all classes and types. The only significant
feature is the owner name.
Because wildcards are encoded as resource records with special
names, they are included in zone transfers and incremental zone
transfers[RFC1995]. This feature has been underappreciated until
discussions on alternative approaches to wildcards appeared on
mailing lists.
2.1 Identifying a Wildcard
To provide a more accurate description of "wildcards", the
definition has to start with a discussion of the domain names
that appear as owners. Two new terms are needed, "Asterisk
Label" and "Wild Card Domain Name."
2.1.1 Wild Card Domain Name and Asterisk Label
A "wild card domain name" is defined by having its initial
(i.e., left-most or least significant) label be, in binary format:
0000 0001 0010 1010 (binary) = 0x01 0x2a (hexadecimal)
The first octet is the normal label type and length for a 1 octet
long label, the second octet is the ASCII representation [RFC20]
for the '*' character.
A descriptive name of a label equaling that value is an "asterisk
label."
RFC 1034's definition of wildcard would be "a resource record
owned by a wild card domain name."
2.1.2 Asterisks and Other Characters
No label values other than that in section 2.1.1 are asterisk
labels, hence names beginning with other labels are never wild
card domain names. Labels such as 'the*' and '**' are not
asterisk labels, they do not start wild card domain names.
2.1.3 Non-terminal Wild Card Domain Names
In section 4.3.3, the following is stated:
# .......................... The owner name of the wildcard RRs is of
# the form "*.", where is any domain name.
# should not contain other * labels......................
This restriction is lifted because the original documentation of it
is incomplete and the restriction does not serve any purpose given
years of operational experience.
Indirectly, the above passage raises questions about wild card
domain names having subdomains and possibly being an empty
non-terminal. By thinking of domain names such as
"*.example.*.example." and "*.*.example." and focusing on the
right-most asterisk label in each, the issues become apparent.
Although those example names have been restricted per RFC 1034,
a name such as "example.*.example." illustrates the same problems.
The sticky issue of subdomains and empty non-terminals is not
removed by the restriction. With that conclusion, the restriction
appears to be meaningless, worse yet, it implies that an
implementation would have to perform checks that do little more
than waste CPU cycles.
A wild card domain name can have subdomains. There is no need
to inspect the subdomains to see if there is another asterisk
label in any subdomain.
A wild card domain name can be an empty non-terminal. (See the
upcoming sections on empty non-terminals.) In this case, any
lookup encountering it will terminate as would any empty
non-terminal match.
2.2 Existence Rules
The notion that a domain name 'exists' is mentioned in the
definition of wildcards. In section 4.3.3 of RFC 1034:
# Wildcard RRs do not apply:
#
...
# - When the query name or a name between the wildcard domain and
# the query name is know[n] to exist. For example, if a wildcard
RFC 1034 also refers to non-existence in the process of generating
a response that results in a return code of "name error."
NXDOMAIN is introduced in RFC 2308, section 2.1 says "In this
case the domain ... does not exist." The overloading of the term
"existence" is confusing.
For the purposes of this document, a domain name is said to
exist if it plays a role in the execution of the algorithms in
RFC 1034. This document avoids discussion determining when an
authoritative name error has occurred.
2.2.1 An Example
To illustrate what is meant by existence consider this complete
zone:
$ORIGIN example.
example. 3600 IN SOA
example. 3600 NS ns.example.com.
example. 3600 NS ns.example.net.
*.example. 3600 TXT "this is a wild card"
*.example. 3600 MX 10 host1.example.
sub.*.example. 3600 TXT "this is not a wild card"
host1.example. 3600 A 192.0.4.1
_ssh._tcp.host1.example. 3600 SRV
_ssh._tcp.host2.example. 3600 SRV
subdel.example. 3600 NS ns.example.com.
subdel.example. 3600 NS ns.example.net.
A look at the domain names in a tree structure is helpful:
|
-------------example------------
/ / \ \
/ / \ \
/ / \ \
* host1 host2 subdel
| | |
| | |
sub _tcp _tcp
| |
| |
_ssh _ssh
The following queries would be synthesized from one of the
wildcards:
QNAME=host3.example. QTYPE=MX, QCLASS=IN
the answer will be a "host3.example. IN MX ..."
QNAME=host3.example. QTYPE=A, QCLASS=IN
the answer will reflect "no error, but no data"
because there is no A RR set at '*.example.'
QNAME=foo.bar.example. QTYPE=TXT, QCLASS=IN
the answer will be "foo.bar.example. IN TXT ..."
because bar.example. does not exist, but the wildcard
does.
The following queries would not be synthesized from any of the
wildcards:
QNAME=host1.example., QTYPE=MX, QCLASS=IN
because host1.example. exists
QNAME=ghost.*.example., QTYPE=MX, QCLASS=IN
because *.example. exists
QNAME=sub.*.example., QTYPE=MX, QCLASS=IN
because sub.*.example. exists
QNAME=_telnet._tcp.host1.example., QTYPE=SRV, QCLASS=IN
because _tcp.host1.example. exists (without data)
QNAME=host.subdel.example., QTYPE=A, QCLASS=IN
because subdel.example. exists (and is a zone cut)
2.2.2 Empty Non-terminals
Empty non-terminals [RFC2136, Section 7.16] are domain names
that own no resource records but have subdomains that do. In
section 2.2.1, "_tcp.host1.example." is an example of a empty
non-terminal name. Empty non-terminals are introduced by this
text in section 3.1 of RFC 1034:
# The domain name space is a tree structure. Each node and leaf on
# the tree corresponds to a resource set (which may be empty). The
# domain system makes no distinctions between the uses of the
# interior nodes and leaves, and this memo uses the term "node" to
# refer to both.
The parenthesized "which may be empty" specifies that empty non-
terminals are explicitly recognized, and that empty non-terminals
"exist."
Pedantically reading the above paragraph can lead to an
interpretation that all possible domains exist - up to the
suggested limit of 255 octets for a domain name [RFC1035].
For example, www.example. may have an A RR, and as far as is
practically concerned, is a leaf of the domain tree. But the
definition can be taken to mean that sub.www.example. also
exists, albeit with no data. By extension, all possible domains
exist, from the root on down. As RFC 1034 also defines "an
authoritative name error indicating that the name does not exist"
in section 4.3.1, this is not the intent of the original document.
2.2.3 Yet Another Definition of Existence
RFC1034's wording is fixed by the following paragraph:
The domain name space is a tree structure. Nodes in the tree
either own at least one RRSet and/or have descendants that
collectively own at least on RRSet. A node may have no RRSets
if it has descendents that do, this node is a empty non-terminal.
A node may have its own RRSets and have descendants with RRSets
too.
A node with no descendants is a leaf node. Empty leaf nodes do
not exist.
Note that at a zone boundary, the domain name owns data,
including the NS RR set. At the delegating server, the NS RR
set is not authoritative, but that is of no consequence here.
The domain name owns data, therefore, it exists.
2.3 When does a Wild Card Domain Name is not Special
When a wild card domain name appears in a message's query section,
no special processing occurs. An asterisk label in a query name
only (label) matches an asterisk label in the existing zone tree
when the 4.3.2 algorithm is being followed.
When a wild card domain name appears in the resource data of a
record, no special processing occurs. An asterisk label in that
context literally means just an asterisk.
3. Impact of a Wild Card Domain Name On a Response
The description of how wildcards impact response generation is in
RFC 1034, section 4.3.2. That passage contains the algorithm
followed by a server in constructing a response. Within that
algorithm, step 3, part 'c' defines the behavior of the wild card.
The algorithm in RFC 1034, section 4.3.2. is not intended to be
pseudo code, i.e., its steps are not intended to be followed in
strict order. The "algorithm" is a suggestion. As such, in
step 3, parts a, b, and c, do not have to be implemented in
that order.
3.1 Step 2
Step 2 of the RFC 1034's section 4.3.2 reads:
# 2. Search the available zones for the zone which is the nearest
# ancestor to QNAME. If such a zone is found, go to step 3,
# otherwise step 4.
In this step, the most appropriate zone for the response is
chosen. The significance of this step is that it means all of
step 3 is being performed within one zone. This has significance
when considering whether or not an SOA RR can be ever be used for
synthesis.
3.2 Step 3
Step 3 is dominated by three parts, labelled 'a', 'b', and 'c'.
But the beginning of the step is important and needs explanation.
# 3. Start matching down, label by label, in the zone. The
# matching process can terminate several ways:
The word 'matching' refers to label matching. The concept
is based in the view of the zone as the tree of existing names.
The query name is considered to be an ordered sequence of
labels - as if the name were a path from the root to the owner
of the desired data. (Which it is - 3rd paragraph of RFC 1034,
section 3.1.)
The process of label matching a query name ends in exactly one of
three choices, the parts 'a', 'b', and 'c'. Either the name is
found, the name is below a cut point, or the name is not found.
Once one of the parts is chosen, the other parts are not
considered. (E.g., do not execute part 'c' and then change
the execution path to finish in part 'b'.) The process of label
matching is also done independent of the query type (QTYPE).
Parts 'a' and 'b' are not an issue for this clarification as they
do not relate to record synthesis. Part 'a' is an exact match
that results in an answer, part 'b' is a referral. It is
possible, from the description given, that a query might fit
into both part a and part b, this is not within the scope of
this document.
3.3 Part 'c'
The context of part 'c' is that the process of label matching the
labels of the query name has resulted in a situation in which
there is no corresponding label in the tree. It is as if the
lookup has "fallen off the tree."
# c. If at some label, a match is impossible (i.e., the
# corresponding label does not exist), look to see if [...]
# the "*" label exists.
To help describe the process of looking 'to see if [...] the "*"
label exists' a term has been coined to describe the last domain
(node) matched. The term is "closest encloser."
3.3.1 Closest Encloser and the Source of Synthesis
The closest encloser is the node in the zone's tree of existing
domain names that has the most labels matching the query name
(consecutively, counting from the root label downward). Each match
is a "label match" and the order of the labels is the same.
The closest encloser is, by definition, an existing name in the
zone. The closest encloser might be an empty non-terminal or even
be a wild card domain name itself. In no circumstances is the
closest encloser to be used to synthesize records for the current
query.
The source of synthesis is defined in the context of a query
process as that wild card domain name immediately descending
from the closest encloser, provided that this wild card domain
name exists. "Immediately descending" means that the source
of synthesis has a name of the form:
..
A source of synthesis does not guarantee having a RRSet to use
for synthesis. The source of synthesis could be an empty
non-terminal.
If the source of synthesis does not exist (not on the domain
tree), there will be no wildcard synthesis. There is no search
for an alternate.
The important concept is that for any given lookup process, there
is at most one place at which wildcard synthetic records can be
obtained. If the source of synthesis does not exist, the lookup
terminates, the lookup does not look for other wildcard records.
3.3.2 Closest Encloser and Source of Synthesis Examples
To illustrate, using the example zone in section 2.2.1 of this
document, the following chart shows QNAMEs and the closest
enclosers.
QNAME Closest Encloser Source of Synthesis
host3.example. example. *.example.
_telnet._tcp.host1.example. _tcp.host1.example. no source
_telnet._tcp.host2.example. host2.example. no source
_telnet._tcp.host3.example. example. *.example.
_chat._udp.host3.example. example. *.example.
foobar.*.example. *.example. no source
3.3.3 Type Matching
RFC 1034 concludes part 'c' with this:
# If the "*" label does not exist, check whether the name
# we are looking for is the original QNAME in the query
# or a name we have followed due to a CNAME. If the name
# is original, set an authoritative name error in the
# response and exit. Otherwise just exit.
#
# If the "*" label does exist, match RRs at that node
# against QTYPE. If any match, copy them into the answer
# section, but set the owner of the RR to be QNAME, and
# not the node with the "*" label. Go to step 6.
The final paragraph covers the role of the QTYPE in the lookup
process.
Based on implementation feedback and similarities between step
'a' and step 'c' a change to this passage has been made.
The change is to add the following text to step 'c':
If the data at the source of synthesis is a CNAME, and
QTYPE doesn't match CNAME, copy the CNAME RR into the
answer section of the response changing the owner name
to the QNAME, change QNAME to the canonical name in the
CNAME RR, and go back to step 1.
This is essentially the same text in step a covering the
processing of CNAME RRSets.
4. Considerations with Special Types
Sections 2 and 3 of this document discuss wildcard synthesis
with respect to names in the domain tree and ignore the impact
of types. In this section, the implication of wildcards of
specific types are discussed. The types covered are those
that have proven to be the most difficult to understand. The
types are SOA, NS, CNAME, DNAME, SRV, DS, NSEC, RRSIG and
"none," i.e., empty non-terminal wild card domain names.
4.1 SOA RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
A wild card domain name owning an SOA RRSet means that the
domain is at the root of the zone (apex). The domain can not
be a source of synthesis because that is, by definition, a
descendent node (of the closest encloser) and a zone apex is
at the top of the zone.
Although a wild card domain name owning an SOA RRSet can never
be a source of synthesis, there is no reason to forbid the
ownership of an SOA RRSet.
E.g., given this zone:
$ORIGIN *.example.
@ 3600 IN SOA
3600 NS ns1.example.com.
3600 NS ns1.example.net.
www 3600 TXT "the www txt record"
A query for www.*.example.'s TXT record would still find the
"the www txt record" answer. The reason is that the asterisk
label only becomes significant when RFC 1034's 4.3.2, step 3
part 'c' in in effect.
Of course, there would need to be a delegation in the parent
zone, "example." for this to work too. This is covered in the
next section.
4.2 NS RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
With the definition of DNSSEC [RFC4033, RFC4034, RFC4035] now
in place, the semantics of a wild card domain name owning an
NS RR has come to be poorly defined. The dilemma relates to
a conflict between the rules for synthesis in part 'c' and the
fact that the resulting synthesis generates a record for which
the zone is not authoritative. In a DNSSEC signed zone, the
mechanics of signature management (generation and inclusion
in a message) become unclear.
After some lengthy discussions, there has been no clear "best
answer" on how to document the semantics of such a situation.
Barring such records from the DNS would require definition of
rules for that, as well as introducing a restriction on records
that were once legal. Allowing such records and amending the
process of signature management would entail complicating the
DNSSEC definition.
Combining these observations with thought that a wild card
domain name owning an NS record is an operationally uninteresting
scenario, i.e., it won't happen in the normal course of events,
accomodating this situation in the specification would also be
categorized as "needless complication." Further, expending more
effort on this topic has proven to be an exercise in diminishing
returns.
In summary, there is no definition given for wild card domain
names owning an NS RRSet. The semantics are left undefined until
there is a clear need to have a set defined, and until there is
a clear direction to proceed. Operationally, inclusion of wild
card NS RRSets in a zone is discouraged, but not barred.
4.3 CNAME RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
The issue of a CNAME RRSet owned by a wild card domain name has
prompted a suggested change to the last paragraph of step 3c of
the algorithm in 4.3.2. The changed text appears in section
3.3.3 of this document.
4.4 DNAME RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
Ownership of a DNAME RRSet by a wild card domain name
represents a threat to the coherency of the DNS and is to be
avoided or outright rejected. Such a DNAME RRSet represents
non-deterministic synthesis of rules fed to different caches.
As caches are fed the different rules (in an unpredictable
manner) the caches will cease to be coherent. ("As caches
are fed" refers to the storage in a cache of records obtained
in responses by recursive or iterative servers.)
For example, assume one cache, responding to a recursive request,
obtains the record "a.b.example. DNAME foo.bar.tld." and another
cache obtains "b.example. DNAME foo.bar.tld.", both generated
from the record "*.example. DNAME foo.bar.tld." by an
authoritative server.
The DNAME specification is not clear on whether DNAME records
in a cache are used to rewrite queries. In some interpretations,
the rewrite occurs, in some, it is not. Allowing for the
occurrence of rewriting, queries for "sub.a.b.example. A" may
be rewritten as "sub.foo.bar.tld. A" by the former caching
server and may be rewritten as "sub.a.foo.bar.tld. A" by the
latter. Coherency is lost, an operational nightmare ensues.
Another justification for banning or avoiding wildcard DNAME
records is the observation that such a record could synthesize
a DNAME owned by "sub.foo.bar.example." and "foo.bar.example."
There is a restriction in the DNAME definition that no domain
exist below a DNAME-owning domain, hence, the wildcard DNAME
is not to be permitted.
4.5 SRV RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
The definition of the SRV RRset is RFC 2782 [RFC2782]. In the
definition of the record, there is some confusion over the term
"Name." The definition reads as follows:
# The format of the SRV RR
...
# _Service._Proto.Name TTL Class SRV Priority Weight Port Target
...
# Name
# The domain this RR refers to. The SRV RR is unique in that the
# name one searches for is not this name; the example near the end
# shows this clearly.
Do not confuse the definition "Name" with a domain name. I.e.,
once removing the _Service and _Proto labels from the owner name
of the SRV RRSet, what remains could be a wild card domain name
but this is immaterial to the SRV RRSet.
E.g., If an SRV record is:
_foo._udp.*.example. 10800 IN SRV 0 1 9 old-slow-box.example.
*.example is a wild card domain name and although it it the Name
of the SRV RR, it is not the owner (domain name). The owner
domain name is "_foo._udp.*.example." which is not a wild card
domain name.
The confusion is likely based on the mixture of the specification
of the SRV RR and the description of a "use case."
4.6 DS RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
A DS RRSet owned by a wild card domain name is meaningless and
harmless.
4.7 NSEC RRSet at a Wild Card Domain Name
Wild card domain names in DNSSEC signed zones will have an NSEC
RRSet. Synthesis of these records will only occur when the
query exactly matches the record. Synthesized NSEC RR's will not
be harmful as they will never be used in negative caching or to
generate a negative response.
4.8 RRSIG at a Wild Card Domain Name
RRSIG records will be present at a wild card domain name in a
signed zone, and will be synthesized along with data sought in a
query. The fact that the owner name is synthesized is not a
problem as the label count in the RRSIG will instruct the
verifying code to ignore it.
4.9 Empty Non-terminal Wild Card Domain Name
If a source of synthesis is an empty non-terminal, then the
response will be one of no error in the return code and no RRSet
in the answer section.
5. Security Considerations
This document is refining the specifications to make it more
likely that security can be added to DNS. No functional
additions are being made, just refining what is considered
proper to allow the DNS, security of the DNS, and extending
the DNS to be more predictable.
6. IANA Considerations
None.
7. References
Normative References
[RFC20] ASCII Format for Network Interchange, V.G. Cerf,
Oct-16-1969
[RFC1034] Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities,
P.V. Mockapetris, Nov-01-1987
[RFC1035] Domain Names - Implementation and Specification, P.V
Mockapetris, Nov-01-1987
[RFC1995] Incremental Zone Transfer in DNS, M. Ohta, August 1996
[RFC2119] Key Words for Use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels, S Bradner, March 1997
[RFC2181] Clarifications to the DNS Specification, R. Elz and
R. Bush, July 1997
[RFC2308] Negative Caching of DNS Queries (DNS NCACHE),
M. Andrews, March 1998
[RFC2782] A DNS RR for specifying the location of services (DNS
SRV), A. Gulbrandsen, et.al., February 2000
[RFC4033] DNS Security Introduction and Requirements, R. Arends,
et.al., March 2005
[RFC4034] Resource Records for the DNS Security Extensions,
R. Arends, et.al., March 2005
[RFC4035] Protocol Modifications for the DNS Security Extensions,
R. Arends, et.al., March 2005
[RFC2672] Non-Terminal DNS Name Redirection, M. Crawford,
August 1999
Informative References
[RFC2136] Dynamic Updates in the Domain Name System (DNS UPDATE),
P. Vixie, Ed., S. Thomson, Y. Rekhter, J. Bound,
April 1997
8. Editor
Name: Edward Lewis
Affiliation: NeuStar
Address: 46000 Center Oak Plaza, Sterling, VA, 20166, US
Phone: +1-571-434-5468
Email: ed.lewis@neustar.biz
Comments on this document can be sent to the editor or the mailing
list for the DNSEXT WG, namedroppers@ops.ietf.org.
9. Others Contributing to the Document
This document represents the work of a large working group. The
editor merely recorded the collective wisdom of the working group.
10. Trailing Boilerplate
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This document expires on or about November 16, 2005.